Globalization and Health is a pioneering, transdisciplinary open access journal that addresses global health issues in the context of a rapidly changing world.
📢 New Editorial!
Don't miss the Editor-in-Chief's latest Editorial piece on shifting geopolitical dynamics, challenges posed by climate change, trade disruptions, conflict, and global health governance.
Read the full editorial: link.springer.com/article/10…
📢 Excited to share our new publication in Globalization & Health on the #CDOH!
We developed the HEALTH-CORP typology, which outlines 70 corporate activities that influence population health and health equity across industries. We also identify 5 population groups affected by corporate practices.
Looking forward to presenting this work at #PHABCCon24 and discussing how it can inform public health practice.
👉 Read more here: link.springer.com/article/10…
Co-authors: Kate Nyhan, Nick Freudenberg, @RansomeYusuf#PublicHealth#HealthEquity@GHJournal@SBS_Yale
How can advocates leverage power to advance comprehensive regulation on ultra-processed foods? learning from advocate experience in Argentina dlvr.it/TD5TMt
An analysis of flavor descriptors on tobacco products in the Philippines: Regulatory implications and lessons for low- and middle-income countries dlvr.it/TD5TMf
In this recent @GHJournal article, Astbury et al. characterised and assessed the structure and function of the network of transnational organisations that interact around the governance of wildlife trade for the prevention of emerging zoonoses: tinyurl.com/4z9ze9c6
ALT The title of the article is "Governance of the wildlife trade and the prevention of emerging zoonoses: a mixed methods network analysis of transnational organisations, silos, and power dynamics."
ALT An abstract of a paper titled '', written by Andrian Liem, Sabina Satriyani Puspita, Fajar and Lita Anggraini. This commentary highlights the critical importance of ratifying the International Labour Organization’s (ILO) Domestic Workers Convention No. 189–2011 (C189) to secure the rights and health of domestic workers (DWs) worldwide, particularly in light of the World Health Organization’s World Health Day 2024 theme ‘My Health, My Right’. The ILO’s C189 represents a significant advancement in labour rights, offering protection to a highly feminised sector where women make up 80% of the estimated 50–100 million DWs worldwide. The ILO’s C189 aims to address the marginalisation and exploitation that DWs have historically faced by ensuring that they receive the same protections as other workers.
Understanding the secondary outcomes of international travel measures during the covid-19 pandemic: a scoping review of social impact evidence dlvr.it/TBTGTF
Evaluating the effect of health insurance reform on health equity and financial protection for elderly in low- and middle-income countries: evidences from China dlvr.it/TBPJ6B
Which government policies to create sustainable food systems have the potential to simultaneously address undernutrition, obesity and environmental sustainability? dlvr.it/TB9Q16